Past Exhibits
Featured Document Display: Remembering the Hollywood 10: Screenwriter Ring Lardner, Jr.
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Early in the Cold War, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) investigated allegations of Communist activity in the film industry.
Featured Document Display: The 50th Anniversary of Title IX
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The Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act
Featured Document Display: Mathew Brady: A Pioneering Photographer
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Credited by many as the father of photojournalism, Mathew Brady is one of the most important photographers in U.S. history.
All American: The Power of Sports
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All American explores the power of sports to embody our national ideals and the power of athletes to challenge us to live up to them.
Featured Document Display: Jackie Robinson—Freedom Fighter
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Jackie Robinson was as fierce and determined about fighting injustice as he was about hitting home runs and stealing bases.
Featured Document Display: Thanksgiving: Historical Perspectives
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In commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the 1621 harvest celebration, explore some lesser-known perspectives of the federal Thanksgiving holiday.
Featured Document Display: 150 Years Ago: The Great Chicago Fire
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The Great Chicago Fire is one of the most famous fires in American history. The conflagration consumed over 17,000 structures, left an estimated 300 people dead, and one-third of the city’s residents homeless.
Featured Document Exhibit: Remembering 9/11
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A collection of children's letters that reveal some of the ways that America's youngest citizens reflected and responded to the deadliest terrorist attack in U.S. history.
Featured Document Exhibit: 50th Anniversary of Apollo 15 and the Lunar Roving Vehicle
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Almost three years to the day after Neil Armstrong’s giant leap for humankind, Apollo 15 astronauts took the Lunar Roving Vehicle for its first spin on the Moon.
Featured Document Display: The Emancipation Proclamation and Juneteenth
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The freedom promised in the Emancipation Proclamation was finally delivered to 250,000 people who remained enslaved in Texas two and a half years after President Lincoln’s historic proclamation and two months after Union victory in the Civil War.
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